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Opera fever has hit the region

Opera fever has hit the region. Christopher Morley takes a look at some of the highlights.

Anna Bolena is part of a trilogy of Tudor operas being performed by the Welsh National Opera at Birmingham Hippodrome(Image: Robert Workman)

We’re entering a busy operatic time around our region, having already begun with Midland Opera’s production at the Crescent Theatre of Donizetti’s delightful comedy The Elixir of Love.

The run continues until Saturday.

And mega-Donizetti comes to Birmingham Hippodrome when Welsh National Opera visits with his trilogy of Tudor operas (Anna Bolena, Maria Stuarda and Roberto Devereux) in the middle of next month.

There will also be a revival of the company’s gripping production of Puccini’s Tosca, as laden with gory melodrama as anything in Donizetti’s three execution operas.

Before then, though, English Touring Opera is bringing three important Italian baroque operas to the Malvern Festival Theatre, presenting Italian Baroque Opera from Venice, beginning tonight (Thursday) with Handel’s Agrippina.

Tomorrow (Friday) it’s the turn of Monteverdi’s decidedly sexy L’Incoronazione di Poppea, and the run concludes on Saturday with a rare chance to appreciate why Cavalli’s Jason was one of the most popular operas of the 17th century.

Malvern moves from the grandiose to the intimate later this season, with Nocturne, a picture of Frederic Chopin.

Lucy Parham has created this programme of music and words drawn from letters and diaries chronicling the Polish pianist-composer’s life, not least the turbulent period of his relationship with the controversial cross-dressing (and deceptively-named) George Sand and their escape with her children to the island of Majorca.